On 2018-01-11 11:57, Dominic Raferd wrote:
On 11 January 2018 at 10:15, MRob wrote:
I use reject_unknown_helo_hostname even though it rejects legitimate
mail,
it also catches a reasonable amount of bad things.
I want to whitelist some clients of course. I thought it should be
easy:
/etc/po
MRob:
> I use reject_unknown_helo_hostname even though it rejects legitimate
> mail, it also catches a reasonable amount of bad things.
>
> I want to whitelist some clients of course. I thought it should be easy:
>
> /etc/postfix/main.cf
> smtpd_helo_restrictions =
> reject_invalid_helo_hostna
On 11.01.18 10:15, MRob wrote:
I use reject_unknown_helo_hostname even though it rejects legitimate
mail, it also catches a reasonable amount of bad things.
I want to whitelist some clients of course. I thought it should be easy:
/etc/postfix/main.cf
smtpd_helo_restrictions =
reject_invalid_he
On 11 January 2018 at 10:15, MRob wrote:
> I use reject_unknown_helo_hostname even though it rejects legitimate mail,
> it also catches a reasonable amount of bad things.
>
> I want to whitelist some clients of course. I thought it should be easy:
>
> /etc/postfix/main.cf
> smtpd_helo_restrictions
I use reject_unknown_helo_hostname even though it rejects legitimate
mail, it also catches a reasonable amount of bad things.
I want to whitelist some clients of course. I thought it should be easy:
/etc/postfix/main.cf
smtpd_helo_restrictions =
reject_invalid_helo_hostname
reject_non_fqdn_he